https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/163014.Ka
On the Mysteries
Iamblichus
http://www.platonic-philosophy.org/files/Iamblichus%20-%20On%20the%20Mysteries.pdf
The fact the 'entertainment industry' calls it "fly over country" is a clue.
Pedovores know what time it is.
Pop culture is not the organic phenomena it appears, but a cultivated artificial medium engineered to permit rapid introduction and transmission of contagious, conditioned behaviors like purchasing and to spread psychogenic illnesses, self-destructive sexual fetishes etc.
Cultures where commerce controls media content and where art is used to sell consumer goods also have the capacity to engineer psychological operations which induce delusions and powerful contagious mental illnesses or collective insanities.
Historical incidents and known forms of contagious psychogenic illnesses are described in "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" by Charles Mackay.
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/24518
In recent years, we have seen mysterious maladies proliferate. Recently, American and European psychologists have been tracking the blue whale game, the Momo challenge, the gorilla glue challenge which use guided imagery, occult symbols sigils and glyphs to evoke a psychic dilemma which persuades victim to ice themselves or huff wasp spray. In addition to obvious mind traps like Momo and the Whale, there are similar cognitive exploits which are far more dangerous.
Rothko's basilisk is a logic trap to which a small segment of the population is especially vulnerable -
https://slate.com/technology/2014/07/rokos-basilisk-the-most-terrifying-thought-experiment-of-all-time.html
more lethal cognitive exploits may be custom designed to exploit any TA's belief system.
DIG MEME PRAY
Cretan Middle Kingdom. Recall that Crete was where the Athenians were forced to send a tribute of children.
>King Minos demanded that Athens pay a tribute to Crete of seven maidens and seven youths every nine years.
Decorative art employed many geometric figures, probably coincidental that the Cretans famously used the 'pedo swirl' on their pottery.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacrificial_victims_of_Minotaur